Microsoft plans to start selling Windows 7 to its business customers on Sept. 1, weeks before the full launch of the operating system on Oct. 22. Microsoft is also promoting the Windows 7 OS to businesses through a collection of steep discount prices. Microsoft is betting that Windows 7 will help it boost its bottom line in the midst of the recession while also helping wipe away bad memories of Windows Vista.
– Microsoft
will start selling Windows 7 to business customers in volume on Sept. 1, weeks
before its official retail rollout on Oct. 22.
As it prepares for a massive worldwide push for Windows 7, Microsoft also
announced that businesses purchasing the operating system in volume would be
able to…
Posts Tagged ‘system’
Microsoft Windows 7 for Business Goes on Sale Sept. 1
Deepak Chopra: Will Russia Join the World?
On his visit to Moscow, President Obama carried more than an olive branch. He urged Russia to join the global community, which may be more…
Amitai Etzioni: First Cut the Abusers, the Bureaucrats, and Useless Interventions!
Throughout the health sector, more than $100 billion are lost each year to fraud, abuse and waste in the health care system.
Microsoft Windows 7 Will Be Skipped by 6 in 10 Companies, Says Survey
Microsoft plans on rolling out its newest operating system, Windows 7, with the expectation that it will help boost Redmonds bottom line in the midst of a global recession. However, a new survey by ScriptLogic suggests that a number of companies will decline to adopt Windows 7 when the operating system makes its debut on Oct. 22. Microsoft is facing a potential competitor in the operating system arena from Google, whose Chrome OS is being specifically targeted at mini-notebooks, known popularly as netbooks.
– Microsoft may have a hard road ahead in convincing companies to adopt Windows 7, its
upcoming operating system that represents the companys hopes for both increased
revenue in a global recession and wiping out bad memories of Vista: According to
a new survey by ScriptLogic Corp, six out of 10 com…
British teen dies ‘in Thai pool’

A British schoolboy has died while on holiday in Thailand, after he was reportedly sucked into a swimming pool pumping system.
It is thought the 14-year-old was trying to retrieve his goggles from a vent at the bottom of the pool.
He is believed to have been with his father, brother, stepbrother and stepmother in the resort of Pattaya.
A Foreign Office spokeswoman confirmed a teenager had died and said consular assistance was being offered.
The incident reportedly occurred on Friday at a water park in the resort, which is 85 miles (137km) from the Thai capital Bangkok.
The boy is believed to have lifted up a grate to try to retrieve his goggles but was swept into the pool’s pumping system.
His family raised the alarm but his body was found a short while later.
The Foreign Office said: "Our consular people in Thailand are giving assistance at this tragic time for the family."</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Microsoft Gazelle Could Take On Google Chrome OS
Microsoft’s ace in the hole in its upcoming battle against Google Chrome OS, the search giants new browser-based operating system, could be a browser-OS hybrid project code-named Gazelle. As more and more applications move into the cloud, the need for a browser-based OS, one that can intelligently interface with a PC while managing Web resources, may become more intensive than ever for both Microsoft and Google as they compete for market share.
– The media cycle of past few days has been dominated by word of Microsofts
apparently imminent demise at the hands of Google Chrome OS, the search-engine
giants newly announced operating system initially intended for mininotebooks,
known popularly as quot;netbooks. quot;
While
predictions of th…
Stanton Peele: Health Care Reform to Destruction
Americans will always demand the most treatment, at any cost. For them, good health care means someone else — insurance companies, employers, the government — will pay for it.
Are we all smiling nicely? Japanese firm to check up on staff

A Japanese rail firm has introduced a system to check that staff are smiling enough at all times.
Computerised scanners around 15 Tokyo stations will measure the smile’s curvature to ensure it is broad enough.
Those failing to measure up – literally – will be advised to look less serious and more cheerful.
The system will also be introduced at a hospital in Osaka to check staff friendliness and at a truck stop to measure the tiredness of drivers.
The BBC’s Roland Buerk, in Tokyo, says that the Japanese highly value customer service.
It is standard practice, our correspondent explains, for smartly-dressed train conductors to bow as customers enter and leave train carriages.
The software has been developed by Japanese firm Omron.
They suggests that future applications may include shops – where they could be positioned to measure the reaction of customers to products on display. </p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
House Dems Seek To Tax The Wealthy To Pay For Health Plan
House Democrats will ask the wealthiest Americans to help pay for overhauling the health care system with a $550 billion income tax increase, the chairman of the tax-writing Ways and Means Committee said Friday.
What Would You Do if Google Web Services Stopped Being Free?
Analysis: Google’s introduction of its Chrome Operating System is causing a lot of debate in the high-tech sector, with some pundits mulling whether Google has taken its free software model to the edge in its attempt to battle Microsoft. eWEEK asks readers what they would pay for Google’s Web services.
–
Google’s introduction of Chrome OS, its Linux-based operating system for netbooks, sparked no shortage
of questions by reporters and bloggers. You can easily tick off a list of 20
questions and that wouldn’t begin to cover the minutiae and the what-ifs.
Long term: Will Chrome OS be…
Super Computers – What are They?
Worlds Top 500 Super Computers Reviewed
MANNHEIM, Germany, BERKELEY, Calif., and KNOXVILLE, Tenn.—The 32nd edition of the closely watched list of the world’s TOP500 supercomputers has just been issued, with the 1.105 petaflop/s IBM supercomputer at Los Alamos National Laboratory holding on to the top spot it first achieved in June 2008.
The Los Alamos system, nicknamed [...]




